Over the past several years there has been a considerable research investment into learning-based approaches for tasks inspired by industrial manufacturing, but despite significant progress, these techniques have yet to be adopted by in the realworld. We argue that it is the prohibitively large design space for Deep Reinforcement Learning (DRL), rather than algorithmic limitations per se, that are truly responsible for this lack of adoption. Pushing these techniques into the industrial mainstream requires a paradigm which differs significantly from the academic mindset. In this paper we define criteria for industryoriented DRL, and perform a thorough comparison according to these criteria of one family of learning approaches, DRL from demonstration, against results of a professional industrial integrator on the recently established NIST assembly benchmark. We explain the design choices, representing several years of investigation, which enabled our DRL system to consistently outperform the integrator's baseline in terms of both speed and reliability. Finally, we conclude with a competition between our DRL system and a human on a challenge task of insertion into a randomly moving target. This study suggests that DRL is capable of outperforming not only established engineered approaches, but the human motor system as well, and that there remains significant room for improvement. Videos can be found on our project website:https://sites.google.com/view/shield-nist.
Reinforcement learning (RL) can in principle make it possible for robots to automatically adapt to new tasks, but in practice current RL methods require a very large number of trials to accomplish this. In this paper, we tackle rapid adaptation to new tasks through the framework of metalearning, which utilizes past tasks to learn to adapt, with a specific focus on industrial insertion tasks. We address two specific challenges by applying meta-learning in this setting. First, conventional meta-RL algorithms require lengthy online meta-training phases. We show that this can be replaced with appropriately chosen offline data, resulting in an offline meta-RL method that only requires demonstrations and trials from each of the prior tasks, without the need to run costly meta-RL procedures online. Second, meta-RL methods can fail to generalize to new tasks that are too different from those seen at meta-training time, which poses a particular challenge in industrial applications, where high success rates are critical. We address this by combining contextual meta-learning with direct online finetuning: if the new task is similar to those seen in the prior data, then the contextual meta-learner adapts immediately, and if it is too different, it gradually adapts through finetuning. We show that our approach is able to quickly adapt to a variety of different insertion tasks, learning how to perform them with a success rate of 100% using only a fraction of the samples needed for learning the tasks from scratch. Experiment videos and details are available at https://sites.google. com/view/offline-metarl-insertion.
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